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             Ian VENABLES (b.1955)  
              On the Wings of Love, for Tenor, Clarinet and Piano, Op.38 */** 
              [23:15]  
              Venetian Songs – Love’s Voice, Op.22 (1993) [15:37]  
              Break, break, break, Op.33/5* [2:24]  
              The November Piano, Op.33/4 [2:56]  
              Vitę Summa Brevis, Op.33/3 [3:24]  
              Flying Crooked, Op.28/1 [1:03]  
              At Midnight, Op.28/2 (1974) [3:51]  
              The Hippo, Op.33/6 [1:28]  
              At Malvern, Op.24 [4:22]  
              A Kiss, Op.15 [4:01]  
                
              Andrew Kennedy (tenor); Iain Burnside (piano) with Richard Hosford 
              (clarinet)**  
              * World Premičre Recording  
              rec. Wyastone Concert Hall, Monmouth, UK, 23-25 November 2009. DDD. 
               
              Available sung texts included and also accessible online here. 
               
              Naxos English Songs Series, Volume 21  
                
              NAXOS 8.572514 [66:04]   
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                Though some of Ian Venables’ music has already been recorded, 
                  I had not encountered his songs before. Love’s Voice 
                  was recorded by Kevin Maclean-Mair and Graham Lloyd on the Enigma 
                  label, a performance which Rob Barnett clearly enjoyed on a 
                  disc which he recommended to lovers of Moeran, Vaughan Williams, 
                  Orr or Butterworth – see review. 
                  I’m not sure if that CD is still available – it never was on 
                  general release – but the Naxos makes a fine replacement.  
                   
                  Andrew Kennedy is an ideal interpreter of Ian Venables’ music, 
                  which he sings as if to the manner born. He has already recorded 
                  some of the songs, including The Hippo and At Midnight, 
                  on the Signum label (SIGCD204), so there is a small degree of 
                  overlap. Kennedy has also recorded Songs of Eternity and 
                  Sorrow, coupled with Ralph Vaughan Williams’ On Wenlock 
                  Edge and Ivor Gurney’s Ludlow and Teme on Signum 
                  SIGCD112 and other songs, including Flying Crooked and 
                  A Kiss, on a CD mainly of Ivor Gurney on Somm SOMM057, 
                  so you would have some 14 minutes of overlap if you already 
                  owned all those earlier recordings.  
                   
                  I must express my thanks at this point to Siva Soke of Somm 
                  recordings for pointing out that his label actually beat both 
                  Signum and Naxos to the post in recognising Ian Venables’ 
                  talent with a recording of the complete Love’s Voice, 
                  Vitæ summa brevis, Flying crooked, At Midnight and 
                  The Hippo in 2006. (Nathan Vale and Paul Plummer, SOMMCD063). 
                  My oversight is all the more culpable because we reviewed that 
                  recording very favourably here on Musicweb International – 
                  see reviews by Jonathan Woolf – here 
                  – and Colin Scott-Sutherland, who thought ‘the whole 
                  quite ravishingly beautiful’ – here. 
                  The typically enterprising Somm recording overlaps some 27 minutes 
                  of the new recording. The coupling, appropriately, is of music 
                  by Gurney, Ireland and Finzi.  
                   
                  Kennedy’s Signum recording of Wenlock Edge is particularly 
                  fine, offering a very strong challenge to existing recommendations, 
                  perhaps even supplanting them. I’ve recommended it in my November 
                  2010 Download Roundup – here. 
                  I’d be inclined to go for that recording first, then for the 
                  new CD, which opens with the longest work, On the Wings of 
                  Love (trs.1-5) a cycle of five songs setting the words of 
                  authors as diverse as the Emperor Hadrian (in translation) and 
                  W B Yeats. The first song, Ionian Song, is dramatic at 
                  times but predominantly wistful and lyrical. It won me over 
                  immediately to Venables’ style, for which it sets the tone, 
                  and its successor, The Moon Sails out (words by Lorca) 
                  did even more to convince me.  
                   
                  By the end of the cycle I was fully persuaded that Venables 
                  possesses a major talent, clearly influenced by such predecessors 
                  as Finzi and Vaughan Williams – it’s no mere coincidence that 
                  Andrew Kennedy’s earlier advocacy of his music was coupled with 
                  the recording of On Wenlock Edge and Ivor Gurney’s Ludlow 
                  and Teme – but with a voice of his own. That voice may not 
                  yet be as fully developed as those of his predecessors whom 
                  I have named, but it’s already not far short.  
                   
                  Venables also shares with Vaughan Williams and Gurney the knack 
                  of setting melancholy words in a manner which contrives to transcend 
                  any tendency to mournfulness. The words of the Emperor Hadrian 
                  in Epitaph (track 4) and Yeats in When You Are Old 
                  (track 5) are set in such a way as to avoid morbidness, 
                  as Vaughan Williams and Gurney do so successfully with the words 
                  of Housman in A Shropshire Lad, and as Peter Warlock 
                  doesn’t quite manage to do in The Curlew – though it’s 
                  a good try. Perhaps the employment of the clarinet in On 
                  the Wings of Love helps to achieve this effect – I was about 
                  to say of thoughts that lie too deep for tears, which makes 
                  me think that Venables would be just the right person to set 
                  the poems of Wilfred Owen.  
                   
                  I was also convinced that Andrew Kennedy is the ideal personification 
                  of Venables’ voice – I know that I’ve already said that, but 
                  it bears repeating – and that he could not have been more ably 
                  partnered than by Iain Burnside and, in the opening cycle by 
                  Richard Hosford.  
                   
                  The Venetian Songs which follow, four settings of the 
                  Victorian poet J A Symonds, something of a Venables speciality 
                  (tracks 6 to 9) are equally attractive. Here again Venables 
                  achieves the effect of wistful melancholy without mournfulness, 
                  even though the clarinet no longer features in the accompaniment. 
                  Perhaps the words of Symonds in Love’s Voice (track 9) 
                  best sum up the composer’s achievement:  
                   
                  ‘Twas better thus toward death to glide,  
                  Soul-full of bliss,  
                  Than with long life unsatisfied  
                  Life’s crown to miss.  
                   
                  The dedication of Love’s Voice to the pianist Ian Partridge 
                  reminds us that Venables is not only most adept at writing for 
                  the voice, but that the accompaniments to the songs also contain 
                  piano writing as carefully thought out as that of almost any 
                  composer that comes to mind since Schubert.  
                   
                  Tennyson’s Break, break, break (track 12) receives a 
                  dramatic setting that makes me hope that Venables will turn 
                  again to other parts of In Memoriam for future inspiration. 
                  Hardy, too, would seem to me to offer the prospect of grist 
                  for his muse’s mill, a view nurtured by the setting of his poem 
                  A Kiss (track 18) and further encouraged by the settings 
                  of Edward Dowson’s Vitae Summa Brevis (track 13) where 
                  the ‘weeping and laughter’ arise out of the dreamy setting and 
                  the misty accompaniment:  
                   
                  They are not long, the days of wine and roses:  
                  Out of a misty dream  
                  Our path emerges for a while…  
                   
                  The most melancholy poem on the CD, Midnight Lamentation 
                  (track 10) receives what is in many respects the most lyrical 
                  setting, while Flying Crooked (track 14) is sufficient 
                  to dispel the impression that everything here is in a wistful 
                  vein, though its mood is decidedly in a minority here. For Venables 
                  in rather different vein, you need to turn to the Signum On 
                  Wenlock Edge CD. The final settings on the Naxos disc, At 
                  Malvern (another Symonds setting, tr.17 – though I’d have 
                  placed it last) and A Kiss (tr.18) round off a most enjoyable 
                  programme.  
                   
                  Most of the Naxos English Song series to date has consisted 
                  of reissues from the defunct Collins Classics label – most welcome, 
                  as they are, I’m very pleased to see that this is a new recording. 
                  That it was made in the Nimbus studio at Wyastone is almost 
                  a guarantee of its quality, and the promise is certainly fulfilled 
                  in the finished article.  
                   
                  The notes by Graham J Lloyd, the dedicatee of Midnight Lamentation 
                  (track 10) and Vitę Summa Brevis (track 13), are 
                  informative and helpful, and it’s also helpful that we have 
                  all the texts except for those of tracks 12 and 14 to 16, which 
                  remain in copyright. The notes are especially good at putting 
                  into words the manner in which the settings capture the mood 
                  of the poems. I would have appreciated a few more dates of composition, 
                  however, and a slightly larger font.  
                   
                  I recommend this new CD strongly: all lovers of English song 
                  should purchase it at their earliest opportunity. If you can’t 
                  wait to order it and decide to download, you can access the 
                  non-copyright texts from the link at the head of this review. 
                  Subscribers to the Naxos Music Library can obtain the whole 
                  booklet there.  
                   
                  Brian Wilson 
                   
                  see also review by John 
                  France 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
               
             
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